South-Carolina
‘A double-edged sword’: The Gullah Geechee people in a complex struggle over land
The Beaufort county council meeting was packed with residents eager to speak about a potential golf course on St Helena Island, South Carolina on 8 April. At stake was the future of a 500-acre property known as Pine Island Plantation/St Helenaville, where a developer had plans of building a golf course.
Those who were against the development of the property cited “backroom shenanigans”, a reference to alleged deals that the developer made with elected officials in a nearby town to garner their support for his plan, and the need to protect the local community. “We’re asking that you listen to the 20,000 people who signed a petition saying that we don’t want this,” Marque Fireall, a St Helena Island resident said.
The people in favor of the golf course argued that the development could bring needed infrastructure, resources and jobs to the island. “I think that the CPO should be abolished,” said the real estate investor Jesse Gantt about the “cultural protection overlay”, the island’s zoning law that bans the development of golf courses and gated communities. “It doesn’t allow me to do what I need to do with my property.” Local zoning ordinances, he said, prevented him from building tiny houses for veterans on his St Helena land.
The dispute illustrates the broader tug of war between preservation and growth on the sea islands throughout the south-east US. Created in the late 1990s, the cultural protection overlay is the brainchild of local activists and members of the Penn School for Preservation, an educational program on land use, also known as the Penn Center. It was developed to protect the land of Gullah Geechee people, the descendants of formerly enslaved west Africans who were forced to work on the islands’ rice and cotton plantations, and who remained in the area following the Emancipation Proclamation.
Although by many accounts the CPO has helped St Helena maintain its rural character, some say it has overreached its intent by preventing Gullah Geechee residents from developing on their land. “They’re still losing their property at the delinquent tax sale,” Gantt told the Guardian. When residents are unable to pay for their property taxes from the previous year, their land could be auctioned at an annual tax sale in October, which is how dozens of Gullah owners have lost their properties in recent years. “So the CPO has absolutely no advantages for the Gullah people.”
Ultimately, the proposed golf course has served as an ideological battleground for St Helena residents, with some advocating for increased development and infrastructure and others considering it a threat to environmental preservation and the Gullah Geechee way of life. “We’ve got to keep asking the question of the people who live within the CPO district,” said Emory Campbell, a former Penn Center executive director. “Are you satisfied with your lifestyle now versus the lifestyle of [the more developed island] Hilton Head?”
A ‘dangerous and bad precedent’
St Helenaville was once a small village and a port for steamers transporting cotton from the island to the mainland until the civil war, when the white residents fled and Black freedmen from other parts of the south occupied the area.
In 1867, after President Andrew Johnson pardoned Confederate landowners and allowed them to return to their properties, white people started to flock back to St Helena Island. Still, for several centuries, the Gullah Geechee have preserved their distinct culture and customs. The island remains one of the last largely undeveloped sites in the area, which can be partly attributed to the CPO’s success in protecting the land from outside developers.
Despite tens of thousands of petition signatures and dozens providing opposing testimony at county council meetings for over a year, the developer Elvio Tropeano has challenged Beaufort county’s efforts to prevent the golf course in state and federal district courts. His legal challenges question the validity of the CPO as he has pushed for his luxury golf course plan to be approved by county government. Tropeano denied multiple requests for an on-the-record interview.
On 16 September, in a win for proponents of the CPO, the Beaufort county council hosted an executive meeting where they voted 8-3 to reject Tropeano’s golf course plans and to back the zoning requirements. But hearings are yet to be set for the state and federal appeals. If Tropeano is granted an exception to the CPO to allow for the development of his golf course, it could create a “dangerous and bad precedent for Beaufort County and St Helena”, said Jessie White, a director at the environmental advocacy organization the Coastal Conservation League, which helped form the CPO and is one of several organizations that filed a motion to intervene in the case. On 18 October, the Beaufort county council filed a motion to dismiss in the federal case.
“It signals that St Helena is basically open for any developer to come to Beaufort county and try to use financial means, political pressure to get whatever rules they want for a development,” said White about the threat the cases pose. “It essentially undermines the continuation of the CPO, because the CPO has very specific and limited restrictions and if the county were to allow one developer to pursue those very explicit restrictions, there’s really no way for them to say no to the next person who comes and asks for the same treatment.”
‘Young people leave and don’t come back’
As a journalist covering Beaufort county in the 1990s, Gullah Geechee resident Theresa White observed members of her community and family hosting fish fries, selling cakes and pies to raise money to pay for their property taxes. She witnessed older people on fixed incomes borrow loans to cover their taxes and then have to take out another loan when taxes came due, she said. The endless cycle of debt that she saw in her community inspired White to found the Pan-African Family Empowerment and Land Preservation Network to help people find solutions to stay in their homes. Theresa White sees the CPO as a “double-edged sword” that helps protect the land at the expense of Gullah Geechee residents.
“[The CPO] keeps the resorts and whatever it is they don’t want to come from coming, but it also keeps the people who own land that could be profitably developed and create generational wealth and that wouldn’t have to be lost because they couldn’t pay taxes from being developed,” said White. “It’s almost like they’re choking themselves to death.”
As of 2022, she said that her organization spent more than $80,000 helping people retain their properties including by paying people’s property taxes and redeeming properties that were sold at tax sales. White said that she supports Tropeano because she believes that he’s standing up for Gullah people who want to have more freedom in what they choose to do with their land. In her work, she said that she’s seen people lose their homes to delinquent property taxes because they were hamstrung by the CPO.
“A lot of people sold property that they wouldn’t otherwise because they couldn’t afford it,” White said. “People are afraid to come out and say that ‘our family has lost land because of the CPO and we could lose our land because of the CPO because we can’t do anything with it.’”
Enslaved Africans made up the majority of St Helena Island prior to the civil war, but today white residents are 65% of the population. Black residents compose just a quarter of St Helena’s population according to 2020 census data.
Marilyn Hemingway, the founder of the Gullah Geechee chamber of commerce, is also in support of the Pine Island development because she believes that residents were not properly informed of Tropeano’s plans to create jobs on the golf course and to use revenue to invest in the community. While originally in opposition to the plan, she said that after meeting Tropeano at Pine Island and learning more about his plans that she had a change of heart and encouraged the city council to negotiate with him.
Hemingway argues that some development on St Helena Island could bring vitality to the area. “Young people leave for education and economic opportunities. And by and large, they don’t come back,” Hemingway said. “So the question becomes, what actions can we do to reverse that?” She envisions that the golf course development would help create jobs and invest in the local community so that young Gullah Geechee adults don’t have to leave St Helena to make a living.
‘Unwise planning can impact them for a lifetime’
On a traffic-free drive around St Helena Island in late spring, Marquetta L Goodwine, an author and artist known as Queen Quet, passed one-story houses and oak trees draped with Spanish moss. As the car slowed down to let a wake of buzzards cross the road and exclaimed: “That’s life in the country!”
As the chair of the cultural protection overlay district committee, she works with Beaufort county to strengthen zoning ordinances. According to Queen Quet, the CPO has no bearing on delinquent taxes: “There’s nobody that’s been displaced here by the cultural protection overlay district. The environment has been protected. Land ownership has been maintained by native Gullah Geechees.” Instead, she sees Tropeano’s development plan as a colonialist tactic meant to sow division among her community.
For many Gullah Geechee people, golf courses have been considered the “beginning of the end”, said the Penn Center’s director, Robert Adams. “At the heart of the idea of the CPO is ‘no golf course’. It invites all of the tourist infrastructure and it raises the prices of taxes for local residents who are already having a hard time holding on to their land.”
Campbell, the former Penn Center executive director, sees the effects of the CPO whenever he drives from Hilton Head Island, which has a four-lane highway, to St Helena Island, where the highway switches to two lanes.
In light of new threats to the overlay, the Penn Center will revive its educational program in 2025 and rename it the Emory Shaw Campbell Preservation School. Participants will range in age from teenagers to middle age – a demographic that the Penn Center believes will lead the future of the community. The center plans to have four cohorts of 360 people from throughout Beaufort county. It hopes that the new iteration of the school will help participants recreate the CPO in other cities and islands.
Campbell said he believes that younger generations hold the key to the island’s preservation: “We gotta make sure that [young people] understand the value of their lifestyle now on St Helena versus the lifestyle of urbanized areas.”
As they spoke against the Pine Island development at county council meetings throughout 2023, the Penn Center realized that people born after 1970 were not civically engaged, said Deloris Pringle, the chair of the Penn Center’s board of trustees. “They just don’t know the tactics,” said Pringle. “They don’t know the issues and they don’t know how unwise decisions and unwise planning can impact them for a lifetime and impact their descendants.”
The Penn Center hopes that St Helena’s CPO will be used as a model for other sea islands along the coast and that with additional funding that it will spread. Pringle added: “It is one of the best tools that communities can use in order to create good land use policy and development policy.”
South-Carolina
JuJu Watkins, Hannah Hidalgo, South Carolina highlight women’s games to watch this week
Napheesa Collier on what to expect from Unrivaled basketball league
Napheesa Collier chats with Mackenzie Salmon about the inspiration behind starting the new Unrivaled basketball league with Breanna Stewart.
Sports Seriously
Technically, Feast Week is still three days away, but given some of the star-powered matchups this week in women’s college hoops, those who are craving good basketball are going to get their fill — and then some.
The two biggest games of the week are both taking place in L.A., more proof that Hollywood really does attract the biggest and best stars. While USC-Notre Dame and UCLA-South Carolina will command plenty of attention, don’t discount some of the unranked and/or mid-major schools listed below. November is a great time to get familiar with non-brand names that could make a run come March.
And with that, here are five women’s college games to watch this week.
Belmont at No. 14 Duke
Thursday, 7 p.m. on ACC Network
Don’t be fooled by Belmont’s 2-2 record — the Bruins took No. 11 Ohio State to the wire last week, and Bart Brooks is one of the best coaches in the country, period. Belmont boasts a balanced scoring attack, with five players averaging 8.0 points or more, but in order to pull an upset in historic Cameron Indoor Stadium, they’re going to need Kendall Holmes (12.2 ppg, 4.8 rpg) and Emily La Chapell (11.5 ppg, 3.0 apg) to step up. Duke, which also has a balanced attack, won’t make it easy, especially if Ashlon Jackson (13.2 ppg, 40% 3FG) and Reigan Richardson (11.4 ppg, 41.2% 3FG) are hitting from outside.
No. 9 Oklahoma at UNLV
Friday, 3:30 ET on Mountain West Network
This could be interesting. UNLV has ruled the Mountain West for a few years, and is often ranked at the end of the regular season. But the Rebels have yet to make major noise in the NCAA tournament, even though they’re often a popular upset pick. Could a win at home over a top 10 team help build the confidence they need to do some damage in March? To upset the Sooners they’ll have to figure out how to handle junior center Raegan Beers (21.2 ppg, 11.8 rpg), arguably the top transfer in the country.
Harvard at Northwestern
Saturday, 1 p.m. ET on Big Ten Network+
Harvard’s already picked up one win against a Big Ten team, knocking off then-ranked Indiana in Bloomington in the second game of the season. And given that the Crimson feature one of the best players in the country you haven’t heard of — senior guard Harmoni Turner is averaging 23.8 points, 4.7 rebounds, 3.7 assists and shooting 45.1% from the field — the chances of notching another big road win look good.
No. 5 Notre Dame at No. 3 USC
Saturday, 4 p.m. ET on NBC/Peacock
The two best sophomores in the country, USC’s JuJu Watkins and Notre Dame’s Hannah Hidalgo take centerstage in a game that could very well break scoring records based on how much these two guards love to push pace. Watkins (21.5 ppg, 6.3 rpg, 4.8 spg) is pro-ready in just her second year of college hoops and Hidalgo (25.0 ppg, 5.2 spg) is maybe the best on-ball defender in the country, a pest who knows how to steal the ball and turn it into points on the other end. But these two are hardly one-woman shows. USC got a gem out of the transfer portal in Kiki Iriafen (17.3 ppg, 7.5 rpg) and the Irish’s other star guard, Olivia Miles (18.3 ppg, 6.8), is healthy after missing last season. You’re going to want popcorn handy when you tune into this game.
No. 1 South Carolina at No. 6 UCLA
Sunday, 4 p.m. ET on FS1
UCLA junior center Lauren Betts (21.5 ppg, 11.5 rpg) is an early favorite to contend for national player of the year honors. One thing that would help make a case for her: a stellar performance against the defending champs. That’s a tall task though, even for the 6-foot-7 Betts. She’ll be going up against Gamecocks like Joyce Edwards (10.0 ppg, 5.0 rpg), a freshman who plays like a veteran, and Ashlyn Watkins (5.7 ppg, 1.3 bpg), who proved last year she’s one of the best defenders in the country. Will UCLA and Betts be able to slow Chloe Kitts (17.3 ppg, 10.3 rpg) and Te-Hina Paopao (13.5 ppg, 44% 3FG)? They’ll have to in order to beat South Carolina. A big game from transfer Timea Gardiner (14.5 ppg, 57.7% 3FG) would also help.
USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll: Defending national champions remain at No. 1
Email Lindsay Schnell at lschnell@usatoday.com and follow her on social media @Lindsay_Schnell
South-Carolina
Updated NFL Draft projections for South Carolina football standouts
The South Carolina football record for single-year NFL Draft selections in the modern era is seven. Both the 2009 draft and 2013 draft saw seven Gamecocks selected. (Back in 1954, nine USC alums went in a much longer draft.)
The 2025 NFL Draft could challenge those numbers.
The Gamecocks will be well-represented in April’s draft, especially on defense. You can check out some recent draft projections below. (The only underclassmen included are TJ Sanders and Nick Emmanwori because of their expected early-round selections.)
[GamecockCentral: $1 for 7 days and 50% off first year]
TJ Sanders
The player most consistently mocked in the 1st round among the draft-eligible Gamecocks is big TJ Sanders. The athletic defensive tackle has gotten top-30 love from CBS Sports’ Chris Trapasso and Mike Renner. Other outlets predict a 2nd or 3rd-round selection, but Sanders appears to be a lock in the top 100.
Nick Emmanwori
Nick Emmanwori has been one of several standouts on this year’s defense at South Carolina. Because of that, the talented safety has become one of the top players at his position in the 2025 draft. Some even consider him this cycle’s best overall safety. Emmanwori is big, fast, and great on the back end. CBS’ Ryan Wilson views the freaky athlete as a 1st-rounder. Most outlets seem to position him in the 2nd round.
Kyle Kennard
Coming into 2024 as a late-round guy, Kyle Kennard has played himself into a new future. Now, following an All-American showing this fall, he has been mocked as high as the late 1st round but seems settled into somewhere in the top 100 according to most sources. That is exactly where The Draft Network’s Keith Sanchez projects Kennard. Sanchez calls him a “Day 2” pick, meaning he believes Kennard will go in the 2nd or 3rd round.
Rocket Sanders
Running backs aren’t nearly as highly coveted in the draft as they used to be, but Rocket Sanders is among the names garnering consideration. The 33rd Team’s Kyle Crabbs projects Sanders to be a 5th-round pick. That also tracks with other NFL Draft big boards and mocks. Most outlets seem to think Sanders will be off the board between the fourth and seventh rounds.
DeAndre Jules
An under-the-radar Gamecock in draft circles in DeAndre Jules. The big defensive tackle has missed some time this fall, but the NFL is still intrigued by the big fella. Walter Football’s Charlie Campbell projects Jules to go in the 3rd or 4th round in April. That is higher than most other mocks, though. When Jules is included on other NFL Draft boards, it is as a potential late-round pick.
Josh Simon
As part of a strong season, Josh Simon tied USC’s single-season touchdown record for tight ends (6) against Missouri. Because of his production, the NFL is taking notice. AtoZSports NFL Draft analyst Ryan Roberts called Simon “a better pro than college player,” which is significant because he’s a really good college tight end. NFL Draft pundits are late to the party, but he’s starting to get late-round buzz as a possible 5th-round to 7th-round selection. The offseason should be kind to Simon’s draft stock.
O’Donnell Fortune
O’Donnell Fortune could be the next South Carolina cornerback to make his way into the draft. In fact, earlier this fall, NFL Draft analyst Tony Pauline gave the Palmetto State native a 6th-round grade. Several other outlets have followed suit recently. Fortune has had a strong senior season in Columbia and should find himself in professional football next year, whether via draft selection or free agent contract. He is a “stock up” candidate.
Demetrius Knight
Demetrius Knight is an NFL linebacker. Because he didn’t play until last year (with Charlotte) and has just one season in the SEC, his stock isn’t high. As things stand, Walter Football’s Charlie Campbell lists Knight as a 6th or 7th-round pick. However, Knight’s size and speed should see him be an offseason riser. His physical testing numbers and pop on film should impress scouts.
Tonka Hemingway
Heading into the season, Tonka Hemingway was viewed as a potential major riser for the 2025 NFL Draft. With other players also stepping up around the country at the position, a solid year for Hemingway hasn’t seen that draft stock bump come to fruition. Walter Football’s Charlie Campbell calls Hemingway a 6th or 7th-round pick.
[Win two tickets to the South Carolina-Wofford football game]
Other Late-Round/Undrafted Free Agent Hopefuls
*The players listed below have received 7th-round or undrafted free agent grades from various outlets*
LB Debo Williams
G/C Torricelli Simpkins
C/G Vershon Lee
LB Bam Martin-Scott
DT Boogie Huntley
WR Gage Larvadain
P Kai Kroeger
LS Hunter Rogers
South-Carolina
Gamecocks Welcome Mercer Thursday Night
COLUMBIA, S.C. – South Carolina (2-2) returns home for a Thursday night matchup with Mercer (2-2) at Colonial Life Arena. Tipoff is slated for 7 p.m. (ET) with Dave Weinstein (pxp) and John Williams (analyst) on the call for the SEC Network+ broadcast.
It’ll be the seventh all-time meeting between the Gamecocks and Bears and first since Dec. 30, 2001, in Dave Odom’s inaugural season as head coach at South Carolina.
The contest will be an unbracketed game part of the Fort Myers Tip-Off, which takes place next week at Suncoast Credit Union Arena Nov. 25 and 27.
Road closures for the annual Vista Lights on Nov. 21 will affect traffic for the campus community and fans heading to the men’s basketball game at 7 p.m. against Mercer.
Starting around 5 p.m., the city of Columbia will close the following streets:
- Gervais Street from Gadsden to Assembly streets
- Lincoln Street from Senate to Lady streets
- Park Street from Senate to Lady streets
Members of the university community are advised to find alternate routes home from campus or to Colonial Life Arena.
Season tickets remain available and more information can be found here. Single-game tickets are now available as well and can be purchased here.
GAME INFORMATION
TIME: 7 p.m. (ET) with doors opening at 6 p.m.
VENUE: Colonial Life Arena
TV: SEC Network+
PLAY-BY-PLAY: Dave Weinstein
ANALYST: John Williams
RADIO: Gamecock Radio Network
IN COLUMBIA: 107.5 The Game
PLAY-BY-PLAY: Derek Scott
ANALYST: Casey Manning
SIRIUSXM: 385 | SXM APP: 975
WATCH: ESPN.com/watch/
LIVE STATS: GamecocksOnline.com
SERIES: SC leads, 4-2
in COLUMBIA: SC leads, 4-2
SERIES TREND: SC has won three-in-a-row dating back to Jan. 2, 1993, a 68-66 victory.
LAST MEETING: Dec. 30, 2001 in the non-conference finale of Dave Odom’s first season ; Gamecocks won 88-52 in what would be the final season of Frank McGuire Arena.
UP NEXT
The Gamecocks head south for a two-game MTE in the program’s debut at the Fort Myers Tip-Off. Carolina opens vs. Xavier (4-0) on Monday. Tip is 8:30 p.m. (ET) on FS1 with Jeff Levering (pxp) and Donny Marshall (analyst) on the call. The team will face either Virginia Tech or Michigan Wednesday night at Suncoast Credit Union Arena.
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